tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News June 5, 2021 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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sadly we scoured all throughout times square and couldn't find any great skittles packages so my fellow cohost have regular skittles packages but we want to give skittles a shout out. all the go to support lgbqt. ♪ ♪ will: good morning and welcome to "fox & friends" on this saturday morning as you look live as ocean city, new jersey with the weekend bringing you into weekend. will cain, carley shimkus and lawrence jones with us this morning. our buddy pete hegseth is somewhere on a beach this morning. not in new jersey, i believe he is upgraded further south. our friend lawrence jones, carley is on day 14 of appearing on television. [laughter] carley: lawrence, man, are you
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tired? lawrence: a little bit. it only hits me when i air. i want to be like carley because i saw her this morning. carley: thank you. >> lawrence: you look great. i woke up like this. carley: that makes me look like i'm for complements. lawrence: i want to be like carley when i grow up. carley: our office as are on the 2 st floor oh my gosh what time is it? my hair was in a side bun still. i still hadn't finished my makeup. we have collected ourselves. we have got it all together and i preach the compliment. will: they are going to give us 30 more second before we move on. carley: can you give me a compliment? will: yes. as long as we are talking about behind the scenes stuff carley is always on her game. i told lawrence this day three you hit your stride. you are with it. day six, seven, you hit a low point. i don't know where 14 is but it
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comes in waives. carley: have you been on tv 14 days straight? somebody give this goya medal. lawrence: it's all good. will: fox news obtains emails reveals intense infighting between state department officials. carley: the cause of that infighting is the lab leak theory. lawrence: lucas tomlinson joins us live from d.c. with more. investigate covid origins. >> good morning, last night dr. fauci was asked how important is it to figure out where this pandemic started? >> scientifically speaking, is it key to know where it came from, to understand the origins of the virus? >> you should want to know how this happened so that we can make sure it doesn't happen again. but what's happened in the middle of all of that i have become the object of extraordinary, i believe completely inappropriate distorted misleading and
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misrepresented attacks. >> emails obtained exclusively by fox news intense bureaucratic infighting over the virus. chris ford writes in january of this year the situation has become, quote, embarrassing. former secretary of state mike pompeo said he was in a battle in his own department. >> we overcame lots of internal bureaucracy to get there and lots of internal debate from nih folks trying to suppress folks doing at the state department as well. >> josh hawley says investigative emails about covid-19 origins are shocking the time has tom for fauci to resign and investigation into the origins of covid-19 and into any efforts to prevent a full accounting. guys? will: thanks so much, lucas. i don't know about you two, that just about early in the morning makes my blood foil hear fauci
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wrap himself up in the cloak of victimhood. he was granted through the power of guide dance. let's be real it wasn't advice it was dictates that everyone followed. he was granted unprecedented power and he was wrong so many times. the question is not one now of whether or not he is simply incompetent but when we look at the origins of covid is he compromised. >> lawrence we as a world honestly should have been united on their. we know for a fact that files just went missing that scientists went missing. and what was very interesting this week when fauci was giving the introduce. look, something may have happened but we don't want to make accusations? do you mean we don't want to make accusations that's the only thing we can do based on the evidence that has been provided for us. i'm hoping congress does something to get this commission to start investigating what
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really happened. the only reason why fauci was not as transparent, my theory is, he was connected in some way. now, did it mean malicious intent? i don't think so, i don't think this guy is bad guy. but what i do think he was trying to do was cover his tail. carley: peter doocy was at the white house yesterday he asked jen psaki if fauci should be held accountable and even if he should be fired. this is what she said. >> should he be held accountable. >> well, i have talked a little bit about fauci dr. fauci and dr. fauci has been out doing interviews himself and answering questions on these emails and questions that you all may have. dr. fauci is a renowned public servant. civil servant, i should say career civil servant. he has overseen management of global health crises and attacked launched on him are certainly something we wouldn't stand by. i understand there is interest in the emails. he has answered a lot of questions on the emails. i don't think i'm going to have much more to add on them from here. pete: can you imagine a circumstance where president
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biden would ever fire him? >> no. carley: very different response from what we heard senator josh hawley to resign. why dr. fauci was so adamant against a lab leak theory is he said his department gave $600,000 over the course of five years to have the wuhan institute of viral or so we thought. there is new reporting out yesterday that shows that actually the money given to the wuhan institute of virology $826,277 over the course of six years. so, you know, why would he say it's 600,000 if it was actually $200,000 more? lawrence: bingo. splitting hairs and this is why i always ask the question why was he supporting andrew cuomo with all his scandals when more revelation was coming out. carley: he said new york had the best coronavirus response. lawrence: well, we know -- what
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is the saying fly together flock together. carley: birds of a feather flock together. they are both out with a book. lawrence: now we know why this is going on. another shady business going on in washington we found this out from the "l.a. times." this is exclusive. biden quietly deployed an app. where seekers privacy experts say they are worried. guys, we were talking about this during the commercial. i think the reason why they decided to put this together is because they are so overwhelmed. they cannot monitor these migrants coming across the border now they needed an app. to it do it. they didn't tell the american public or coming they decided to do thunder the radar, will. will: yeah, this is, perhaps, a way to make it more efficient. perhaps, because they are overwhelmed. always making it easier for people to enter this country, operate, navigate the system. only furthering to open a door that needs to be one that is more like a monitored gate.
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can people, should people be able to enter this country either through the process of immigration or asylum now establishing an app. helps to grease the wheels makes you wonder what the ultimate goal and purpose bringing people to this country. carley: app. is called cp gacial recognition and cloud technology to store information on asylum seekers before they enter the country. dhs says it's necessary because border patrol agents can't people all at once. if you are asylum seeker essentially checking into the u.s. like one would check into an uber or a hotel. on the other hand, border agents do say one of the issues that they have is there is a for people to cross the border they are so busy processing them that the bad guys and the drugs go n another area. if this app. could make that better for them maybe it could make the overall situation a little safer. lawrence: it's interesting because i actually spent a week at the laredo sector they
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already have fingerprint technology. this is some of the new numbers coming up this explains why they are going to this app. it's up 900 percent. 760 criminal illegal immigrants arrested so far this fiscal year vs. sixth such arrests made in this same time frame last year. according to the laredo officials. i spoke to some of my sources on the ground. this is a problem that has gone out of control. it goes back to, will, this open borders policy. you wonder why kamala harris has not gone to the border. now, she is supposed to go to mexico. carley: guatemala tomorrow. she is packing her bags as we speak. lawrence: speak with them about root causes. are they going to help on their side of the border to prevent this from happening? how about that root cause? will: as the lights go on and off here in the studio. carley: that wasn't just me. will: the lights literally dim on us on the studio.
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shine a light on other stories as well. bari weiss the former opinion editor in the "new york times," she has left. she has left, on her own. independent thinker podcast. she obtained some audio from a panel, a lecture at yale at the school of medicine at yale. and speaking of shining light on something. you have to hear what dr. arune that co-lonnie had to say. watch this.
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lawrence guys, i don't know about you guys, the quote after she pulls the trigger in the fantasy that she is having she says the bounce in her step. that is psychotic. and this is a psychiatrist. maybe she should be getting some help right now. it's commented. i don't understand how she could teach any child right now. will: there is no doubt we are looking at extreme example of a poisonous ideology. make no mistake it is a progression on the linear chain of leading people down racism. cloaked in academia. this isn't just racism. let's be clear what you just heard you heard genocidal thought from academic teaching at the highest or speaking at the highest, you know, the highest echelons of academia in the united states of america. at a minimum she needs help,
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lawrence. at maximum the entire education system of the united states of america needs to be drug into a therapy session and set straight. carley: i feel like if she said that on a website in the comment section, somebody could flag that to their local police department and just get a knock on the door. she said that at yale university. i just feel -- will: let me ask the question what do you think the reaction was in that panel? what was the reaction as see was talking to other academics? carley: head nodding? will: was there head nodding? did people get up and walk out? i want to know what we're accepting. not just what they are saying but what they are accepting. >> lawrence: i haven't seen a lot of headlines about this. >> carley: maybe now that we are shining a broader light on it they will comment on it. it she has so much hate in her heart. that's a sad place to be. we have got to turn now to headlines. we will start with a fox news alert. unlawful assembly declared overnight in minneapolis as
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protests rage for a second night over a deadly police shooting. officers were seen making arrests as protesters set fire, looted businesses and vandalized buildings. winston smith jr. was shot and killed by u.s. marshals earlier this week. he was a felon, wanted for illegally owning a gun. police say smith was shot after he fired a gun during his arrest in minneapolis. a second amendment victory in california, a federal judge overturned the state's decades old ban on assault weapons ruling it violates the constitutional right to bear arms. now, in his ruling, the judge notes how many assault weapons were registered in the state saying, quote: one is to be up forgiven if one is persuaded by news media and others that the nation is awash with murderous ar-15 assault rifles. the fact, however, do not it support this high enter low beand facts matter. governor gavin newsom is
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fighting to fight that decision. royal caribbean it set sail. ships will depart from florida, texas and washington state. royal caribbean will not require passengers to be fully vaccinated. right now cruise lines are currently in the process of it performing simulated cruises to test covid protocols. they are getting it all ready, guys. lawrence lawrence time to get back. will: absolutely. will: still ahead, in flight takedown caught on camera. how a flight attendant's quick action detained unruly passenger. it reportedly offered access to hillary clinton's presidential campaign. stunning emails uncovered next. ♪ call me ♪ call me any, any time ♪ call me ♪
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will: fox news exclusive report. lobbying form offered up former ukrainian prosecutor access to top officials in hillary clinton's 2016 presidential campaign. this was just weeks before the election. here to react is "new york post" opinion editor and author of the unbroken thread the wisdom of tradition in an age of chaos sohrab ahmari. great to see you this morning. here is another connection between hunter biden a lobbying firm, corrupt officials and eastern europe and at this point, not the obama administration but potentially the clinton administration. should hillary clinton had won the 2016 presidential election. what does it mean about hunter biden first and then let's get to what it means about and for joe biden. >> well, as far as hunter biden goes, this gives you another
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nexus of corruption involving hunter biden, the firm burisma that was paying him $50,000 a year, apology. $60,000 a month who knows what, we know what. and basically ukrainian shady affairs because this prosecutor that was being pitched for access is worth remembering was the one who took over the ukrainian investigation of burisma and remember that now has to go joe biden. joe biden boasted about having ousted his predecessor, the other prosecutor. so, if i may just put it all together, this is such a clear case of collusion of the kind that we spent four years collusion between government and russia and the trump campaign and it is very infuriating because it turns out that the
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obama-biden i kind of clinton camp were doing precisely what they accuse trump administration of and team trump of which, of course, never materialized. so, i don't understand how the pitch forks aren't out. will: as you point out, by the way that's the trend and the theme of the past 10 years. those with the most racist intentions are the ones yelling racist. those convincing are are accusing others of a crime are the ones committing them behind the scenes. i will let you get that alarm as i read the 2016 email. this is former obama state department official george kent detailing his meeting with ukrainian prosecutor it's called blue star strategy that's the lobbiying form blue star ceo's pitch was that she could gain him access to high levels of the clinton campaign, and this was appealing, to meet the possible next presidential chief of staff. so, as you laid out sohrab well is hunter biden at the nexus as you pointed out of so much
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potential governmental influence and interfering in eastern europe and here at home. bring joe biden back to it as you said. we know what happened when joe biden was vice president. we know the access that hunter was peddling. what does this particular story mean for joe biden? >> well, i mean, if you note that this same firm that was pitching a potential replacement prosecutor for the prosecutor that was investigating burisma, which is the firm that was paying hunter, so this same firm is also representing or pitching the replacement of prosecutor. so, look, this raises a lot of questions. and if the flimsy basis for collusion and the quote, unquote, ukraine call between president trump and ukrainian president led to impeachment hearings and four years of the mueller probe, et cetera, et cetera. then this should also call for congressional oversight.
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because, the material we have here, combined with the stuff that was suppressed by big tech by the way last year, it just shows you that there is a lot of questions to be answered by team biden. will: i have got to run. you know firsthand this is russian disinformation sohrab. not calling for an investigation think is collusion with the russian government. we will look for the truth. more "fox & friends" next.
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another day, another chance. talk to your doctor about adding protection it could be the day you break the sales record, or the day there's appointments nonstop. with comcast business, you get the network that can deliver gig speeds to the most businesses, and you can get the advanced cybersecurity solutions you need with comcast business securityedge. every day in business is a big day. we'll keep you ready for what's next. get started with a great offer, and ask how you can add comcast business securityedge. plus, for a limited time, ask how to get a $500 prepaid card when you upgrade. call today. carley: good morning, back with quick headlines. president trump will not be returning to facebook any time soon. the platform says the former president will remain suspended for at least two years. facebook says it will reassess the ban in january 2023. and they're not the only big corporation punishing the g.o.p.
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rioters reporting jp morgan chase will keep its donation freeze on a handful of republicans who voted to overturn the 2020 election results. big all donations after january 6th. the freeze will reportedly last through next year. lawrence? lawrence: thanks, carley. as crime skyrockets in cities across the country, congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez says she has the answers to stop it. >> if we want to reduce violent crime, if we want to reduce the number of people in our jails, the answer is to stop building more of them. it's to support communities not throw them away. lawrence: ran against aoc in 2020 and executive director of unite the fight pac. sherri re, thank you for being on the program today. what's your reaction to aoc's comments considering the district she represents is up in crime and that's a district that you ran for? >> thank you so very much for
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. ♪ ♪ will: good morning and welcome to "fox & friends" on this saturday morning as you look live as ocean city, new jersey with the weekend bringing you into weekend. will cain, carley shimkus and lawrence jones with us this morning. our buddy pete hegseth is somewhere on a beach this morning. not in new jersey, i believe he is upgraded further south. our friend lawrence jones, carley is on day 14 of appearing on television. [laughter] carley: lawrence, man, are you tired? lawrence: a little bit. it only hits me when i air. i want to be like carley because i saw her this morning. carley: thank you. >> lawrence: you look great. i woke up like this. carley: that makes me look like i'm for complements. lawrence: i want to be like carley when i grow up. carley: our office as are on the 2 st floor oh my gosh what time is it? my hair was in a side bun still. n claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo
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>> yes, i'm more than confident in dr. fauci. carley: there you have it president trump throwing his support behind dr. fauci after newly released emails suggest fauci suppressed the wuhan lab leak theory. will: florida congressman michael waltz part of the science committee joins me now to react. good morning, congressman, good to have you on the program. what's your reaction to not only joe biden's response to that question but what you think should happen at this point with dr. anthony fauci. >> i think what you are seeing from his emails but also from that bombshell vanity fair article is that our scientific bureaucracy led by dr. fauci was heavily invested in, professionally, reputation nally, our entire career life work and in many cases financially because of the amount of grant money that was moving in suppressing the wuhan leak theory, right?
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so you had that compromise. they were completely compromised the same people charged with investigating were the people benefiting on top of that you had a media that just had this antibody reaction to anything president trump put out. anything that mike pompeo put out that it could have been this lab which made sense to most of us and then on top of that you had a chinese bureaucracy and bureaucratic kind of propaganda machine that was pumping out information around the world and here we are a year later just now getting around to the fact that this probably came from the premier gain of function research laboratory in the world and, you know, here we are. kill. will: congressman, i think that's a very accurate diagnosis of the situation where we stand today. what do you think that leads us to? do you think dr. anthony fauci should be fired. >> well, i think we need to get to the bottom of exactly what happened and we still haven't
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yet. and if this reporting proves to be true, congressman frank lucas and i just sent a letter over to the office of science in the white house where josh rogan was reporting from "the washington post" that fauci was the biggest pusher of turning gain of function back on in 2017 after the obama administration because it's very controversial had put a moratorium then, yes, i think he -- we need to have accountability. and he needs to be held accountable. lawrence: so, congressman, we had the former secretary, mike pompeo on earlier this week and i asked him about how long did they know about this that there was some type of connection between fauci behind the scenes with that lab and he said he couldn't get at the sources and methods. okay. you are a member of congress. does congress have that information now? >> that's what we are asking for. we are asking for when did the white house authorize the office
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of science in the white house authorize apparently, according to the reporting, push by dr. fauci to turn this type of research back on and people have to understand gain of function research is like putting this virus on steroids and the only place in the world outside of the united states that conducts that type of research is wuhan. and fauci authorized the funding. it went through. lawrence: quick and i'm sorry for interrupting you. >> no, that's okay. lawrence: who has the authority to turn that back on? >> well, our understanding he did with the acquiesce says of science in the white house. if you look at the fact that he was one of the biggest advocates for gain of function, wuhan was the premier place that it was being done and, yet, facebook banned discussion of it. the media called it debunked. one of fauci's biggest
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compatriots this daszak at ecohealth alliance dependencing the funds organized scientists to say it was a conspiracy theory, this whole thing stinks and the bottom line is we can't prevent the next pandemic without understanding how we got to the bottom of this one. ainsley: you know, congressman, it sounds like you are saying that you think this was a cover-up. that you think dr. fauci was so against the wuhan lab leak theory because he was trying to cover his own tracks. is that what you are saying? are you willing to go that far? >> well, it looks like it thus far, right? i want to get some answers. i want to have a hearing. i'm the ranking republican in the research and technology committee. my colleague, frank lucas, is the ranking republican in the science committee. and i want to hear directly from the individuals involved. but if the reporting is correct, yeah, that's what it looks like. it loox looks like everyone's interests were aloned to not have this have this not be a lab
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leak because it would have been the kind of chernobyl for the type of science that they are pushing and the same thing we had with 3-mile island and the nuclear science would have done to their form of virology. will: really quickly congressman because i don't have time left. cya making sure so many interests are protected along the way is the explanation if there is a coreup you are suggesting. could it be, should it be looked into obviously that it could be deeper. those interests also align with the interest of the chinese communist party. how much influence over what happened since the leak, how much influence was being wielded from beijing? >> and that's where everybody's interests were aligned. chinese government didn't want it to come from the lab. pushers of gain of function research didn't want it to come from the lab. everyone wanted to oppose what trump was saying so they didn't want it to come from the lab. what is biden's position about the research going forward? how far do we prevent this from happening again since the last
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three pandemics came from china and we're getting silenced. we are not getting any kind of response. will: that's an important question for me how much power beijing is wielding over the united states of america. colonel michael waltz i hope can you find those answers. thank you. >> thank you. will: turning now to headlines two police officers are hospitalized after being shot in an ambush attack. police say the officers responding to a domestic dispute at a massachusetts apartment when the suspect opened fire. both officers were shot multiple times the suspect was killed in the is theout. a canine officer was shot and killed in the exchange. police say kit was a 12 year veteran of the force. officers honored him with a procession at the scene. a delta airlines flight attendant stops a man from attempting to hijack the plane. passengers on board the nashville bound flight from los angeles capturing the takedown. the flight attendant using zip ties to restrain the man as passengers helped drag him to the back of the plane. pilots diverting course landing
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in ballcarrier new mexico so police could take the man into custody. check this out. a deer interrupts class on the last day at an elementary school in minnesota. surveillance video shows the animal darting out of the nurse's office and sliding down the hall. several teachers chasing after it rushing to open the back door. the deer got in the building by breaking through a window. it did not appear to have any major injuries at least that was after it led to the nurse's office. we don't know what led it into the nurse's office in the first place. they may have been injured and needed help needed a nurse. at least they could have did was help the deer. carley: let's turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our forecast. will: boom. carley: did i do it? rick: nailed it. of course, you get to watch like multiple weekends. carley: last weekend. go back in dvr and watch seven
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episodes prior to this one at home. rick: not only was it right but it was quick like it rolled off of her tongue really quickly. she didn't stall and like take a deep breath. all right, guys. here you go. here are your temps as you are waking up this morning. take a look at that, 79 degrees right now in minneapolis. so really, really warm. in fact it's going to be a really hot day. one of the stories we are watching here at fox weather right now. a lot of moisture down across parts of the south. we have had a really soggy week. get ready that doesn't change. very heavy rain come in across parts of louisiana right now. we will see pretty significant rain throughout the week. continued threat for flooding. in fact, some areas by the time we are done with this week probably pushing about 10 inches of rain across areas of east texas, parts of louisiana. parts of arkansas. >> you get the idea. unfortunately way too much rain. we cannot buy any rain across parts of the north dakota. incredible drought right there. and take a look at these temperatures. today bismarck 101 degrees.
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100 degrees in fargo, minneapolis, a little break tomorrow and heat begins to build back in by the time we get toward the coming week. take a look at areas northeast heat in the area as well. guys, summer wasn't here at all last week for memorial day. finally arrived. guys? carley: all right. thanks, rick. all right. the may jobs report again falls short and critics say biden's unemployment benefits are to blame. our next guest runs a catering business offering several sign-on perks but still struggle bring in to hire. his take coming up next ♪ i do it for the ♪ as you charge ahead. illuminating the way forward.
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family owned restaurant with locations in new york and connecticut. he joins me now. good morning to you. tell me a little bit about your business. you say that business is booming but you are still struggling to hire people to help you out. >> that's right. we are a fast casual operation. we make the best hand cut chicken nuggets you will ever have. we were set up for takeout before the pandemic and, of course, it was incredibly difficult time. once we sort of weathered the initial storm, business increased the community was sponsored us and supported us. but now we are at the point where the current level of staff that we have really just can't support the business. ainsley: do you think it's because of that $300 incentive
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or that and something else? what do you think the issue is? >> i think there's a lot of factors. i think the incentive makes it more of a challenge, absolutely. i think now that schools are we opening and now we are hitting summer vacation. i think there is a lot of mitigating factors in addition to the unemployment benefits but certainly that makes it a challenge for us. carley: i'm sure you saw the jobs number yesterday. it was better than april but still lower than expected. you are a businessman, what do you think the government should do to get that number even higher than it was in may? >> you know, i think we need to encourage people to come back to work. i think maybe that does mean those unemployment -- the extended unemployment benefits. any employer worth their salt is seeing now that their job is to take care of their employee. maybe that means increase thing the minimum wage and benefits. doing things like tuition
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assistance and transportation assistance the. the small business owner is too long his and her part and the government may need to step in and possibly end those extended benefits because the job is there and the pay is there we want to provide our people with a real living wage. that's what we are doing. any employer worth their salt should be doing the same thing. carley: i was reading what you could for your employees. it's unbelievable. your starting salary is $15 an hour. 2 or $3 an hour higher than the connecticut wage. you are also offering tuition assistance. that sounds really generous. it also sounds expensive. are you doing that because that's what it takes to keep employees or is that kind of out of the kindness of your heart kind of thing? what's the reason behind it. >> it's a bit of a combination. we had a chance to really all of us take a step back during the last 14 months and see what mattered most and certainly our families and health and for us as small business owners it's our employees can we wouldn't be
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anywhere without them. >> we thought what can we do within reason to help out the people who make our business run. and so certainly there is also an incentive there. we want to stand bo our competition when it comes to hiring. so, it's a bit of a combination of we want to take care of our people and this is something that small business openers need to get creative and think about how they could keep cash in their employees pocket and that's what we are trying to do. carley: you are saying you have the best hand cut chicken nuggets ever tasted i'm sure business will get a little bit more strong for you. hopefully you can hire folks. frank, thank you we appreciate it. >> thank you we appreciate it. carley: ufo report found no evidence of alien spacecraft but they aren't ruling out the possibility. we will discuss the other potential explanation that has intel officials and will cain on edge. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ lawrence: welcome back. government officials briefed on the pentagon ufo report no evidence that spacecraft are alien spacecraft they are not ruling it out either. will: dr. show shack, thank you for being with us. i find that an odd framing no evidence that it is extraterrestrial. no what evidence would be available. right now it's a question of what options should remain open. these are unexplained phenomenon that could be anything short of recovering one of these craft i don't know what evidence we would be able to find at this point. >> i think that's a good point.
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people have been trying to do that ever since the 1940s find conclusive evidence that we are being visited. from my point of view i doubt it very much that we are. i mean, there are phenomena that explain these videos but they don't involve aliens in my opinion. will: what are those phenomena if you don't mind me asking? something that looks like a peanut or a particular tack it twists slowly and darts off the screen. if this navy pilot were following another jet a twin engine jet maybe has nothing to do. infrared camera looking up the tail pipe of that jet in front of you and it looks like a peanut. all right. >> so i'm not saying that's what it was but it could have been something like that. if you are going to make the plane that doggone the aliens have come all the way to earth to tease our navy pilots i think you need better evidence than that. carley: the other explanation would be that these -- it's more
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benign and that these unidentified flying objects are something from one of our adversaries that's even been tossed out like iran or china with you a lot of the people who have seen them say that they move in a way that is totally unexpected and it's technology that we here in the united states don't go so how possible is it that a company like china would have something that advanced that the u.s. doesn't each know about? >> tough go to the pentagon to get a good answer to that i think it's unlikely also keep in mind that witness testimony is not really reliable. you wouldn't send somebody to chair because the next door neighbor said i think he did it i saw somebody who looked like him. you have to be unambiguous and the things they describe moving very quickly, funny maneuvers all that sort of thing all of that depends on how far away the object is. if it's not very far away it may look like it's going $5,000 miles per hour but it's
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not. lawrence: i wish there wasn't so much secrecy on it i think that's what creates all the speculation. i think americans are as a public we are entitled to know more information, anyway, thank you for coming on the program. >> you are quite welcome. will: balance being dismissive against being conclusive. this is an open question. dan bongino, lara and you need it here. and here. and here. which is why the scientific expertise that helps operating rooms stay clean is now helping the places you go every day too. seek a commitment to clean. look for the ecolab science certified seal. what's the #1 retinol brand used most by dermatologists? it's neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair® smooths the look of
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will: smoky mountains. i was on the other side of the smoky mountains on the tennessee side. when you think about mountains you think rockies. can you even think about the appear flags up here. the smoky mountains are beautiful. >> lawrence: i like seeing the trees of the you don't get that in tennessee. there is no nature just buildings. carley: so true. like late may when i finally looked out my window oh my gosh there are leaves on the tree. so few trees on the city i didn't think about that wow that's actually kind of nice. moving on in the world in this year. all right, speaking of moving on, now a big story we have been following this morning. president biden not satisfied with the latest g.o.p. offer on infrastructure. lawrence: the white house press secretary says the offer doesn't meet the president's objectives to grow the economy. will: lucas tomlinson is live from washington with more. good morning, lucas. >> good morning, will. president biden rejecting the latest republican offer on
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infrastructure following a phone call from west virginia senator shelley moore capito. expressed effort for goodwill indicated that the current offer did not meet his objectives to grow the economy, tackle the climate crisis and create new jobs. the g.o.p. is offering 928, the white house 1 230eu7b trillion. are now it's -- not all democrats want to see come down from original offer. jamaal bowman says if what i'm reading is true i would have a very hard time voting yes on this bill. 2 trillion was the compromise. potus can't expect us to vote for infrastructure bill dictated by the republican party. >> look, we clearly have to deliver this summer. i think that's understood. the president has been very clear he doesn't have a lot of red lines. he is willing to at least hear out all kind of different ideas but one red line he put out there loud and clear is that inaction is unacceptable.
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>> shelley moore capito is a duke alumnus it's not clear if she said who should coach the blue devils an coach k.'s depart. will: do you have. >> i think have you got to get tommy out of harvard. will: thank you, lucas. meanwhile, i think maybe perhaps one of the biggest he head fakes in partisan political history over the last half a century has been the idea that somehow corporate america aligns with the side of the republican party. there has been a massive realignment, i think, over the last several years or at least a massive reveal. because the partnership between the democratic party leftist politics in corporate america continues to be married. former president barack obama hearing'ed to that relationship. he called on that relationship. he talked about corporate america and said time for them to jump in as they did in georgia into texas. and into any other state that is passing voter integrity laws that he calls voter suppression
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laws. watch his speech at the economic club of chicago. >> this really has to do with there is basic rules by which we all have agreed to to keep this diverse, you know, multiracial democracy functioning. are we going to stick to those rules or are we going to start rigging game in a way that breaks it and that's not going to be good for business. not to mention not good for our soul. i think the corporate community has a responsibility to at least call folks out on that. not -- because that transcends policy. lawrence: a couple things on this. talk about the merits of them getting involved how woke they are. when you look at the boards and company makeup of these companies that are so woke, there is no diversity really there. okay. that's the first thing. they are judging others but they don't even do it in their own
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company. second thing an article done in fortune after the wake of george floyd they promised $50 billion, right, to invest in the community, put jobs in black america. there was only $250 million given of that. so, these companies talk a big game. they are really not about it when it comes to their own company, when you look at the makeup of their company and the investments that they promised they don't even deliver on that. the second thing is what is getting ready to happen right now a lot of conservative states are going to start pushing back on this. we had a county commissioner on from north carolina yesterday. they are taking the coca-cola machines out of there. if you want to do in this is going to be a back and forth thing. i don't think it's great tore citizens get back to core values. we want you to have diversity and invest in communities this whole take prohibition of the day straight up lying about georgia after they helped write the bill they lied about it. carley: yeah, so former
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president obama's more companies to step up and do the same thing that happened in georgia. look at what happened to companies like coca-cola and delta and the mlb. i mean, they were called out so much because of what they did and then specifically with the mlb when they moved their game from a georgia to colorado, you look at the colorado voting law and it's almost like just -- it's even more restrict tia than what republicans had proposed in georgia. so, i don't know. i love what walmart has to say about this. they said that they tonight talk about politics. they don't talk about cultural issues. dive into the policy conversation on things that affect their bottom line like finances. other than that they stay silent and then people won't expect them to discuss the next issue. lawrence: in georgia all those businesses suffering and now texas. carley: companies should be like dolly parton. don't go there. don't go into politics and everybody will love you. will: build on having two points. the two big takeaways for this
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from me as you compared colorado to georgia. why don't you use your words and explain to me what is wrong with these laws instead of just simply painting with a broad brush president obama of calling it a rigged game. step up to the tank that senator tim scott laid out and specifically tell me what you have a problem with in these bills. let's see if the actual facts back up your claim that these are racist voter suppression laws that rig the game. i have a suspicion that you can't and won't be able to do it. all you are doing is playing on big broad trendy accusations. second is just be real. there is a divide in this country. there is big politics, big tech and big corporations who are largely in bed together at this point. and then there is everyone else as you said small businesses got crushed in georgia. individuals out there who want voter integrity which is a very popular concept by the way. most people out there support voter i.d. you are seeing a divide where those elites, those big corporations, companies,
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technology, politics, they -- talk about suppression. they suppress now the small and the individual. they dictate to you how you should live your life. lawrence: in order to do that will, they would have to admit their involvement in this. again, when i talk about georgia, delta got in this big uproar. i love delta. their corporate lobbyists helped write the bill. they received that back and all these major companies have their corporate lobbyists involved in this. they like to back out once the bill has been passed. i think it's hypocritical. will: buy small, buy local. carley: there is a parent tatyana ebrahim in new york she spoke out at school board meeting. she is calling out the board because of critical race theory. take a listen to what she had to say. >> stop indoctrinating our children. you're teaching my children and other children that if they believe in god almighty they are part of a cult. why can't we let the public know that you are teaching our children to go out and murder our police officers.
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do you want the proof? i have the proof. is that what scares you, the proof, that a parent actually standing up against all of you? you work for me. i don't work for you. this is still america, ma'am. and as long as i'm standing here on this good ground earth of god, i will fight. and this is not the last of me. you will see. carley: that woman is awesome. oh my gosh. lawrence: new yorker momma. carley: do you know what i think is amazing about this whole topic is a year ago nobody knew what critical race theory was. now there are laws in several states that have completely banned it. parents across the country saying you have to stop teaching this divisive rhetoric to our children. you cannot teach kids at such a young age that color is the only thing that matters. and that one color are oppressors and the other is victims. what does that do to a child that goes so far against where we have come from with martin luther king jr. saying that don't judge a person by the color of their skin but the
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content of our character. that is the perfect way to look at the world. there has been such an overcorrection of that people are teaching children today with critical race theory. lawrence: so great that the parents are standing up. that's the first step, parents' involvement understand what their kids are getting. the problem is you won't be able to get rid of crt, critical race theory. it has seeped into the culture. carley: in some school districts can you though because of a woman like this. lawrence: they are going to seep it n some of the coursework. they may call it c are t but it's going to be there. the best thing parents can do get involved as the parent are doing at their school board. you have to teach your kids at home the history to combat what they are getting ready to face in that classroom. i told this story earlier on "fox & friends." when i was growing up my parents very strong in their faith wanted me to know who jesus christ was. every single day when i went to school my teachers hated jesus and they tried to convince me
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wasn't real. if i did not have that foundation at home, then i couldn't combat that in the classroom. it is a theory. critical race theory. kids are going to learn all type of theories. it's wrong and factually incorrect. we shouldn't be teaching it. but if they are going to teach the theory. then we have to weaponize our kids with the information and facts so they go in ready for battle every day, will. will: you are 100 percent right. i also share a little bit of your pessimism about the size of the fight before us. this is good what we are seeing happen at certain school boards this is integrated into almost every aspect of our culture only describing the size of the fight. you will need to see more parents stand up. and hopefully that extends into fights conversations we had a little bit earlier against big corporations and against big tech. it's going to take that type of backbone and moxie from individual americans and i think what's happened is yes went too far on this racist ideology and second is don't mess with our children.
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simply do not mess with our children. that seems to be the breaking point. hopefully that coerce over into pushing this individual's fight into every aspect of the big fight that is our culture. lawrence: final point i will say and i think is important i have had a lot of parents reach out to me on this topic. we do disservice when we don't teach the full history. i think it's a crying shame in america we are still learning portions of history learning about black wall street. just come up learning about different things when it comes to juneteenth. they don't know the story and spruced to it first at the school. that's when the problem. parents why didn't you teach me that? and they rely on the -- that's why you have got to too it at home, folks. carley: teach the good and the bad but we can't censored bad part or the good part: the good part is what we are censoring we have overcome so so much.
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recall maximum sentence for the kill of an uber eats driver. the girl and another girl tased him as they stole his car in washington, d.c. they sped off as he clung to the door. the 15-year-old was charged with second degree murder and sentenced to juvenile detention until she turns 21. parents are calling out the san francisco teachers union after they endorsed an anti-israel group. the union passing this resolution backing the boycott divestment and sanctions movement known as bds. it says, quote: as public school educators, we have a special responsibility to stand in solidarity with the palestinian people. jewish parents now saying they are worried for the safety of their kids. and the moment a 3 week old baby is saved by an arkansas police officer is caught on camera. watch this.
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[crying] carley: body camera catching tapping his back to get the child breathing again. that officer along with baby grady and his parents will join us in the 9:00 hour to discuss that scary ordeal. lawrence guys, i am so happy -- normally we only see the bad body cam footage. i'm so glad now that has been this offensive message of he sewing the good of the profession as well. which one more frequent and which one defines that. carley: body camera footage is the best thing to happen because you do get to see that. will: new side effect emerging in teens that got covid-19 vaccine. symptoms. late night star jimmy kimmel equating florida to dictator run north korea. you have got hear this. ♪ ♪
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with. will: heart inflammation a rare side effect in teens who get covid-19 vaccine. alarming study in the journal of pediatrics seven male teenagers reported heart muscle inflammation after second degree dose of the pfizer. indicating a possible link. here to react is dr. marc siegel. always great to see you. let's sort of start. here's the question. imfor one am asking i know many people are. do i need to get my children vaccinated? i have a son over the age of it. now i'm balancing two different concerns. neither of which has very big data to support it. let's start with this. does the shot -- does my child if he gets the shot, run the
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risk of heart inflammation? with. >> well, let's start with that, good morning. that's extremely rare. they study deed that well in israel now and one out of 50,000 people who got the shot had a problem like that where they had a temporary transient inflammation in the heart in young adults 18 to 24 it was one out of 6,000. as you mentioned the seven cases here in the united states. it is extremely rare. i mean, if a child or a young adult got chess pain, shortness of breath after the shot you would look into it. i spoke to peter marx at the fda in charge of this. he said all of the cases here that they have seen pretty much have been transient. they have not proven an association but i think it's likely. i think it is likely due to the shot. but then that has to be contrasted, of course, to covid-19. will: that's right, dr. siegel, that's where i wanted to go second. unlikely but possibly and perhaps even likely connected to the shot. unlikely in terms of one in 6,000, 7,000 as you said.
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still, if i'm a parent, i'm going to balance that against the risk of my child getting code and getting incredibly sick with covid. dr. rochelle wolenski teenage numbers going up still dealing with a small sample size, right? >> absolutely. but do know this, 200 kids were hospitalized last flont covid-19. one third ended up in the icu. most of them had underlying medical conditions. those should be at the front of the line. including being overweight to get vaccinated. here's the thick i have really got to bring out. will, they study deed professional athletes who had gotten over covid. they found 4% or 5% of them had the same heart issues going on. in other words, you are much, much, much more likely to get myocarditis or inflammation of the heart from having covid-19 than ever had this shot. still got to be personal choice but you make a decision by listening to will and siegel talk about this. that's how you decide. will: yeah, that's exactly right. i think parents have a difficult
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decision. parents need to be appropriately skeptical of everything at this point. and i have heard you say this. i only have about a little over a minute. i want to get you on this. you saw something a week ago. i saw you on television. fear is the most powerful motivation of any human being. i want you to see fear play out. this is a poll on democratic voters and their willingness to return to normalcy. 71% of democratic voters say stay home as much as possible. versus only 29% ready to get back to normal. less than a minute, dr. siegel but i want to get your reaction. >> that is completely ridiculous. there is many reasons for that one as you said already, will, the politics of fear. you take the mask off but you still mentally mask, right? and telling you over and over again. under the current administration. be careful. don't go too quickly. wait a minute, we have been vaccinated. we are not going to get covid. you are not going to spread covid. some, of course, are milking the nanny state. no supervisor when you they're
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at home online. i'm cynical about that part, too. but medically speaking from a public health point of view. you got the vaccine, you get out and go outside and enjoy the summer. will: i have got to run. it's not greed or ambition. our baseline motivation is fear. thanks so much, dr. siegel, good information this morning. more "fox & friends." >> thanks, will, thanks for having me. ♪ you are rocking that grill. family: guy fieri? but that pulled pork could taste even better on king's hawaiian slider buns. thanks, guy!
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in business, it's never just another day. it's the big sale, or the big presentation. of serious side effects. the day where everything goes right. or the one where nothing does. with comcast business you get the network that can deliver gig speeds to the most businesses and advanced cybersecurity to protect every device on it— all backed by a dedicated team, 24/7. every day in business is a big day. we'll keep you ready for what's next. comcast business powering possibilities. carley: 14-year-old girl critically wounded after she was shot in the back of the head by young gang members. no suspects are currently in custody for the shooting. joining me now is raimondo lopez alderman of chicago's 15th ward. alderman, we are talking about another tragedy here.
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i want to just ask you about the 14-year-old girl really quickly. she was getting snacks with her boyfriend and then three young men approach her, ask her if she is in a gang. she says no. she starts to run. they chase her down and shoot her. do you have any update on her condition? >> well, good morning. at this point in time we -- she is still in critical condition. and, unfortunately, this is just another example of generational gang violence run amok in the city of chicago. we know that three individuals come up to her and asked her and her boyfriend gang affiliation. we are hearing reports while she is not in a gang her mother is. and the opposition took that as their cue to open fire. we see this time and again in neighborhoods where generation after generation is instilling gang culture into their children and we know that that leads only to one conclusion which is shooting and death. carley: yeah, i saw that you
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tweeted you were at that area where the 14-year-old had been shot. and you heard 17 rounds of gunfire go off right in front of an elementary school. i know that chicago has always had a crime problem, but numbers show that this is getting worse. so why is that? >> you know, it's getting exponentially worse. even two days later after the 14-year-old was shot. we had a 15-year-old shot while waiting in traffic with her parents in front of buckingham fountain, one of the most iconic fountains in the country. what we are seeing is emboldening of criminals and gang members. and not only in chicago but across our nation because of these lax laws and these policies that are very pro-criminal and do not protect the victim. in chicago, we no longer allow officers to chase offenders on foot. we don't allow them to chase them in their vehicles. pretty soon i'm sure someone is going to announce we're no longer going to put handcuffs on them because it may hurt their wrist. criminals know, this understand this and exploit this daily. we are seeing that in the rise
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of the statistics in chicago and elsewhere. >> we just showed the numbers. so far in 2021. 1418 people have been shot in chicago. i mean, that number seems -- it's unimaginable. so you mentioned that chicago mayor lori lightfoot banned foot pursuits in most cases. police officers can't even chase a criminal if they run away. what should lori lightfoot do to make this problem better to alleviate this issue a little bit. >> i think the one thing she needs to do which i know she won't do. she needs to let police officers do their job. we spent hundreds of millions of dollars training our men and women in blue to do their job correctly and safely. and, yes, there are incidents where mistakes happen. but that's in any profession. by and large our officers know how to apprehend criminals that are terrorizing our neighborhoods. unfortunately, her policy has been to give those individuals a free pass at the expense of demonizing our officers. and that is not how you reduce
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crime in any city. least of all the city of chicago with its high gang population. carley: absolutely. alderman lopez, thanks for speaking out we appreciate it. >> thank you. carley: come up, 900 percent spike of illegal immigrants in one sector of the border. former acting dhs secretary ken cuccinelli. calling florida north korea why he compares the sunshine state to the real jet stream. ♪ ♪ you oughta customize your car insurance with liberty mutual, so you only pay for what you need. oh um, doug can we talk about something other than work, it's the weekend.
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♪ [screaming] >> they're drowning, they're drowning. they're drowning. >> help, help. [screaming] carley: horrifying video along our southern border showing migrants nearly drowning and a young boy screaming as he is abandoned by smugglers. lawrence: unbelievable. arrests skyrocket 900 percent in the laredo sector alone.
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will: vice president harris is still missing in action at the border as she prepares to travel to central america this weekend instead. former acting dhs secretary ken cuccinelli joins us now to react. i don't know what word we are searching for chaos, ken? i don't know but those videos speak for themselves. what do they say to you? >> well, they are antidotal evidence. which is what joe biden intends. that is hard for us to believe but they want 150, 200,000 illegal aliens coming across the border a month. this is what the result is. it is the spike in crime along the border. it's those border communities being overrun. it's the texas governor having to declare a state of emergency because the president of the united states won't do anything to protect the border.
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the list goes on and on and on. the biggest beneficiaries here are the drug cartels sitting in a pile of money and laughing like warlocks. and they are the most evil, vicious people in the entire hemisphere. and they are perfectly happy to execute scenes like those in the video that you just saw. and until this administration is willing to actually take steps to stem the flow of illegal immigration into the country, we are going to keep seeing this and seeing scenes and treationdz like this. i would point out the smugglers, you heard of the woman talk about they are drowning. smugglers will throw people into the river to occupy the border patrol. that is a tactic for them. lawrence: i'm sorry to cut you off, but i hear a lot of time that you guys in the state department as well as homeland prepared the biden administration, warned them. >> oh, yeah.
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lawrence: what exactly did you tell them and what did they respond. >> we had over 200 transition meetings in the department of homeland security. over half of them were related to immigration. and the vast majority of those had no political participants at all. these were career immigration professionals. and in meeting after meeting after meeting, the biden transition team was told if you do what you have been talking about, you will create a crisis at the border. they were told over and over. they literally came in with no plan with how to deal with the flow. and you see the actions they are trying to take now. their idea of dealing with the flow of illegals is how to facilitate it. they are spending taxpayer dollars to fly illegals farther into the country instead of flying them home. it's that kind of attitude that facilitates higher and higher
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numbers. carley: absolutely. it's because of biden administration doesn't see this as a crisis, which is why kamala harris is going to guatemala tomorrow instead of the southern border. and a lot of these people aren't just children or family units that are crossing the southern border. you heard in our introrks just the laredo sector alone, they caught 760 criminal illegal immigrants. that begs the question. how many haven't been caught? >> absolutely. those are the ones that try to get away. understand this yes, they caught 700 if acts of criminal illegallian aliens. what did they do with them? they released them into the united states. carley: they didn't deport them? >> our own government is unleashing criminals, known criminals on to our own population. that's what's happening with those people. lawrence: so catch and release is back. >> remember, if you are not a convicted murderer. convicted, not accused. convicted rapist or a convicted terrorist, you are not on the
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biden priority list for deportation. covid or not. carley: wow. >> that's what's happening at the border today. it's no surprise that henry cuellar, the congressman from that area, a democrat, is flaming mad at this administration. it isn't just republicans. will: as you point out it shows up in the antidotal evidence in those videos but also in the stacks as well. thank you for being with us this morning. >> good to be with you all. will: major break through in 49-year-old cold case. illinois prosecutors have charged berry lee welcomely with the murder of 15-year-old julie hanson found dead with 36 stab wounds in 1972 authorities say they linked him through the crime d.n.a. testing saying he lived within a mile of hanson's home at the time of the kill. a plane slides off the runway at ronald reagan international airport. the plane was carrying 151 people from denver when it rolled onto the grass after coming in too fast. no one was hurt and the runway
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has since been reopened. the incident is under investigation. and the state of florida is known for many things. but this is a new one. listen. >> in america's north korea, the sunshine state from time to time we enjoy taking a look at what is going on. >> i'm proud to be here today in the everglades as we kick off registration for the 2021 python challenge. >> unfortunately all the prices are pythons. will: late night host jimmy keim mel calling north carolina. challenges hunters catch snakes wreaking havoc. will florida has a python problem. i follow instagram account where a guy goes hunting python. carley: it's open state. it's the opposite. '. will: yeah. not california where jimmy kimmel is broadcasting live
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from. where governor newsom is not going to give up emergency powers not new york. but florida. lawrence: that's not funny. carley: they kill pythons in north korea? larr larr this is our state of comedy. turn to rick reichmuth. did i screw it up? carley: did you great, lawrence. rick: no, you were great. lawrence: it was okay? rick: i'm laughing at all the python talk. will: i want to go on a python hunt. i'm in. rick: it's a really big issue in florida. it's true. let's talk a little weather out there. another big issue we have incredible drought especially across parts of north dakota. farming is impacted right now. take a look at the city. high temperature of 101 degrees. we cool down a little bit tomorrow. it warm back up on monday. for a lot of this coming week. same goes out across parts of the east, that heat is in the northern plains is going to build out across parts of the
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east. we have a very warm week here come in as well. including this weekend right now. temps into the lower 90's is going to be humid and very uncomfortable all across parts of the northeast. take a look at this. 100 degrees right there for far go today. and parts of florida. upper 80's. hotter across areas of the far northern plains. take a look at this across parts of the deep south well below average because of a lot of moisture that's in there. we are going to see significant rain throughout the day today. we have had a lot of this rain the last number of days. ground is really saturated and threat for flooding is ongoing over the next couple of days. here is that moisture we are talking about all across areas of the south, especially today louisiana, builds in back across parts of east texas next number of days. all right. guys back to you. carley: thanks, rick. i was going to say something i will let you go. buy, rick. carley: i noticed on his map that it's going to be hotter in new york than it is in miami today.
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will: really? carley: bad hair day. ladies, just to be forewarned if you live in new york city. will: 100. -- 100 far go. carley: left is handcuffing doing job. nypd detective union sounds off. is he coming up next with his message. to give you exceptional care and 20% off your treatment plan. new patients, take the first step with a complete exam and x-rays that are free without insurance. because our nationwide network of over 1,500 doctors at 900 locations all have one goal — to make you smile, today. start now. call 1-800-aspendental or book online at aspendental.com
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will: war on police continues this time in new york where the left is pushing a new bill through the state legislature. lawrence: the bill aims to are force. the police union says it will make it impossible for them to do their job. carley: detective endowment association paul digiacomo. tell us about this bill and what
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it would do to policing. >> well, this is one bill that's justification in the use of force. and they would criminalize police officers and detectives while making an arrest using force. they want a tier system that would escalate as the situation would escalate but officers have to make a split second decision and people will be second guessing and monday morning quarterbacking these situations and putting the officers at risk and subject to arrest. will: yeah, paul, what we're trying to do it seems like we want officers to have good judgment in responding with the use of lethal force. but, this bill tries to codify that right? like you said tiered system. like if x happens then y can happen. if the suspect does, this then you are allowed to do this there is no possible way in my civilian estimation. an officer can go through this calculation while chaos is unfolding. >> it's virtually impossible. all it does is put the public at
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more risk, and officers and detectives out there trying to enforce the law at more risk. lawrence: paul, i have got to ask you this because there is already a system put in place called escalation of force that is taught in the police academy. carley: ier. lawrence: there is already training now that talk about deescalation of training. so what is different from this bill and the training that is already received? >> well, this bill would subject the officers to arrest. and it's not fair to the hardworking men and women of the new york city police department that are out there putting their lives on the line every day. these decisions are made in a split second and you know, it's not fair to the officers that are out there. carley: yeah. absolutely. and then, you know, you have police officers who are making those split second decisions and they're faced with, are you know, a criminal that could put them in danger and they are thinking okay, what do i do here? should i use my weapon or could i get fired if i do?
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it makes it an impossible situation for a police officer. also, nypd police officer dermot mcshae was talking about the rise of crime in new york city. he said it has to do with bail reform laws and that police officers are constantly rearresting the same people. is that true? >> absolutely. well, first the new york state politicians enacted bail reform laws that let all the criminals out of jail. now they are trying to take away the investigative tools that we use to arrest these individuals for these violent crimes. next, they will be giving community service awards to violent criminals. i don't know what they are thinking. but they don't have the interest of the people of new york city in their minds. will: we have new law here essentially to your point, lawrence, takes what police officers are trained and subjects them to legal, criminal, potential accountability. that leads to fewer officers. and that leads to higher crime. good cops no longer choose to be good cops. thank you so much, fall paul, for joining us this morning. >> have great day, thank you.
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will: coming up, as small businesses struggle to find workers, some democratic governors are finally realizing part of the problem. it's unemployment benefits. shocking solutions they are exploring next. ♪ ♪ i felt awful because of my psoriasis. i was covered from head to toe with it. it really hurt. then i started cosentyx. okay, thanks... that was four years ago. how are you? see me. cosentyx works fast to give you clear skin that can last. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen, or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. i look and feel better. ask your dermatologist
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>> we went from having among if not the lowest unemployment rate in the nation to one that is still sticking the national numbers that have come out are encouraging. i think it's a combination of things. perhaps it's due to that somewhat to the $300 premium. lawrence: that was new jersey governor phil murphy admitting the added unemployment benefits
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are contributing to the labor shortage in his state and it comes as michigan governor gretchen whitmer pushes a plan to let people work part time while still collecting unemployment benefits. here is fox news contributor and professor of business and economics at the kings college in manhattan. brian brenberg. so, brian, she is teaching them how to double dip. >> yeah. i saw this story and it was a couple things that stood out to me. one was wait a second so you are going to give people jobs or let people take jobs but you are still going to pay them unemployment. isn't unemployment intended for folks who can't find jobs? explain that one to me. but the other problem with, this lawrence, is they are taking the money apparently from leftover american recovery act funds. i keep hearing this and i'm thinking why do we have so much money left over from this plan? if this plan was so critical to get us back and recover, why do i keep hearing there is all this money that can be re-purposed?
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it feels like workers are getting fleeced here. businesses are competing against the federal government. and workers, as a result, are having to make an impossible choice. do i take more money by staying at home or go to work? it feels like taxpayers are getting fleeced because they are giving away all this money for programs that just don't make common sense. pay people to work. don't pay them not to work. lawrence: brian, i have got ask this question. i know i'm a crazy libertarian. do you think there is a secret plan to use this to raise the minimum wage? some employers already doubled the amount of money that these people would have been making. and they still won't return to work. '. >> yeah. it's hard to not reach that conclusion, lawrence. because you look at this. businesses are competing against the federal government. this is what people have to understand. businesses right now are competing against their own government to hire workers and that's a game that they can't win on their terms. they can only win it on the federal government's terms. and the federal government's
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terms are you are going to have to raise your wages. but, of course, we are seeing that's getting passed on to consumers in all these inflation numbers. if you have been out on the road going to a restaurant, a convenience store, you name it, you have seen those higher prices. my family and i were on a road trip to mount rushmore stopped at more convenient stores and outlets and restaurants than i care to mention. every single one of them help wanted sign in front. when we got inside an apology for the slow service because they are short-staffed. businesses cannot win a game where they are competing against their own government. and that's exactly what's happening right now. lawrence: when do we start to see, this brian? because the economy is good right now. when does this start to hurt the economy? >> well, i think it's hurting it right now. here's why. you know, for years economists have studied the effects of workers who have been out of the labor force for a long period of time and we know that it has long term effects on employment
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prospects we are building a culture right now that says it's perfectly okay for the government to pay people to stay home, to pay people to stay on the sidelines. that's an insidious affect that starts now but could last, you know, throughout this recovery and beyond. i think we are already seeing the effects, lawrence, but there is going to get worse if we don't reverse course. thank goodness that there are states who have said enough is enough. we are getting rid of this enhanced unemployment benefit. the fact is the federal government needs to stop this now. president biden should not talk about well, i'm comfortable ending this at labor day. huh-uh if you are comfortable ending this at labor day you need to end it now. far too many businesses saying we can't do this. lawrence: it has to stop. government mommy and daddy have go away and people have to get back to work so we can get this show back on the road. brian, thanks so much for coming on the program. >> you bet, sir. good to see you. lawrence: coming up, the cold shoulder? a popular clothing company
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will. we're going to have a good time today. carley: that was a toe tapper. will: that was literally the first time i have heard that song. carley: i thought i was going to come across as old calling it a toe tapper. will: stuart varney constantly surprised by the music they play for him? i'm turning into stuart varney. during a senate hearing, dr. fauci claimed the u.s. gave $600,000 in research funding to the wuhan lab. carley: but now new judicial watch findings show it was much more than that. lawrence: a lot of shady business and lucas tomlinson joins us live with more on that report. lucas, what are you finding out. >> good morning, lawrence. lawmakers unsatisfied with that report from the world health organization in march saying it was quote, extremely unlikely the virus leaked from the chinese lab. now judicial watch releasing new documents claiming dr. fauci was off by $200,000 but how much the u.s. government gave that lab in
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wuhan to support gain of function research. a controversial study making pathogens more infectious. a member of that w.h.o. team that went to china in march to investigate with peter daszak who help organize after the pandemic started ruling out the lab leak theory. scientists question that rush to judgment. turns out echo health alliance in 3.4 million national institute grant five years beginning in 2014, according to the "wall street journal." now missouri senator josh hawley says anthony fauci's recently released emails and investigative reporting about covid-19 origins are shocking. the time has come for fauci to resign and for a full congressional investigation into thor jibs of covid-19 and any and all efforts to prevent a full accounting. there is no evidence to support the national theory evidence from a lab leak is hard to come by. many accuse the chinese communist government of a cover-up. guys? lawrence: thanks, lucas.
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carley: just so we are all on the same page dr. fauci in the beginning of this pandemic and all throughout this past year, he said that there is no way this lab leak theory is possible. the way that the virus knew at a timed, it showed that it jumped from an animal to a human. and then it turns out that we learned that his department gave what he said, $600,000 to the wuhan institute of virology over the course of five years. and now this morning we're learning that that number was actually like lucas just said over 800,000 over the course of six years. so, you know, maybe he could say well, i wasn't lying. you know. it was 600,000 over the course of five. but then why wouldn't he just give the full number, the full figure of the six-year total and could it have even been more? and in april 2020, dr. fauci received an email and that email said heads up. and it was warning that republicans are angry about taxpayer dollars being used to fund research.
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lawrence: i'm reminded of my mom, what she used to tell us half truth is a lie. and look, are i'm not suggesting that dr. fauci is some mad scientist. nighttime saying that he had evil intentions. but what i am saying is that he hid the full story from america. a lot of the talking points that he was using, will, came straight from the chinese communist party. will: correct. lawrence: the fact that we haven't held him accountable for that is problematic for me as well. also, another thing that doesn't get enough attention, do you all remember what china was also saying in the middle of this? they were saying that this virus came from u.s. soldiers that came to china. so this is an american issue right now. >> and i think when you have barnes & noble, amazon taking his books off their website. i think where there is smoke, there is fire, will. will: talk about the chinese perpetuating the lie that this came from u.s. soldiers. they also said specifically it
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came from fort dix united states of america. ari fleischer said if that were true if the virus did come through the united states, how do you think everybody would respond? what do you think the media's position would be? it would be very different than it is now with the probability that it came from china. listen. >> reverse the situation. let's just say that this came from america and that it came somewhere in a city where we had a biological military lab, don't you think all the american media would demand to know what the lab was doing, were they conducting any type of research similar to the type of disease that is now leaked? of course they would. the hammering the american press would have come to american institutions would have been profound. they didn't do it to china. will: you brought up a saying from your mother a moment ago. i'm going to bring up one from the former president of the united states. george w. bush one he manning imelled but still fool me once shame on you. fool me twice, shame on me. why should he be trusted on the
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feasibility the safety of the vaccine. why should we trust it on mask which we know he shouldn't be trusted on mavericks which those emails further revealed if you are a liar or inept in one situation and why do we presume truth and competence in other situation. the chinese communist influence is the real question. ari fleischer points out the troubling standard. now ask why the double standard existst? because the chinese communist party controlled the message, including from our own bureaucrats. lawrence: now that we know, this carley, a quote from fauci from the interview yesterday, he said that we don't want to be accusatory of china. and i think that even with all the revelations that are coming up, to still say that, lets me know there is more there. i hope congress continues investigating. carley: dr. fauci says his emails are being taken out of context. everything he said in these emails he can explain. but. lawrence: i'm waiting for it. carley: there is a lot of things we didn't know that were shown in these emails especially what
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he knew about the origins of the pandemic and the fact that there were real scientists actually saying hey, wait a second, this could have come from the lab at the time and he totally dismissed it. meantime, there is a poll out about democratic voters and how they feel about returning to normalcy. and take a look at the numbers. 71% say that they should stay -- that people should stay home as much as possible and 9% say that we should go back to leading normal lives. which i think is really interesting. because, you know, i guess time tyingboth of these two things together coronavirus has been all-consuming for everybody. everybody around the world. particularly in this country democrats who are much more hesitant to go back to normal, even now that we have. will: i will tie these two things together as well they will criticize us, anyone who would dare to criticize dr. fauci. what this poll reveals is they are either suffering from two conditions one neurosis driven by fear incapable of
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understanding the science behind covid or using it as another way to show their own quote, unquote stay home, be afraid of covid as though that's a virtue. lawrence: we had dr. siegel on earlier he talks about that fear that will was alluding. to say take a look. >> that is completely ridiculous. and there is many reasons for that politics of fear. you take the mask off, but you still mexicoly masked, right? and they have been telling you over and over again. and under the current administration, be careful. don't go too quickly. well, wait a minute, we have been vaccinated. we are not going to get dove. covid. some are milking the nanny state. use offed to stay ago at home no. supervisor the at homeworking online. from a medical health point of view you get the vaccine us, you go out you get outside and enjoy the summer. lawrence: unbelievable there was polling done by the chamber of commerce. i typically disagree with the chamber of commerce. 30% of people said that they
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would not return to work ever. and 50% of them are saying they are not even actively looking for work. people have become very comfortable and that's because government doesn't particularly train people this is the new normal. keep hearing this new word. reimagine. this is the new normal for them but we can't allow that to happen. carley: we absolutely cannot. incentives making it happen. time to peel those back so we can go back to normal. meantime, there is a psychiatrist, she lives in new york city. and she spoke at a yale university panel. so this happened at an ivy league school. and she was talking about how she fantasizes about shooting white people. take a listen to what she had to say. >>
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carley: so filled with hate racist. she is not saying this on some internet blog somewhere. it's not in some comment section. she is saying that at yale university. and to a group of people. and she is a psychiatrist and she is supposed to be the one helping other people with their anger. lawrence: she had the audacity to use the word demented. i think that's quite demented. i will say this because i'm sure people watching this and i'm
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sorry you guys have to hear that graphic behavior. this is not an outlier. i covered college campuses for two years at campus reform. this is not new. they say crazier things than this in the classroom. this is the indoctrination that happens in these classrooms. and, you know what's crazy? when it starts to take road, it's hard to reverse that effect. these kids are learning this type of stuff in the classroom every single day, will. will: it's not just racist. it is racist and it's indictable on that. but it's not just racist. that's genocidal. that's demented as you point out. that's sick. that's a human being that needs help. who is preaching that poison in the highest levels of academia in this country and we talked about this earlier. i want to know what the reaction was in that room. i want to know what the students and fellow professors responded to that craziness. that shows you how far not just that she has gone but we have all gone. how far did that room react? lawrence: she got a bounce in her step, will. will: turning now to your
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headlines. a 14-year-old boy pleads not guilty in the kill of his classmate aden is being tried as an adult. is he being accused of stabbing tristan bailey 114 times last month. police say they found his clothes with bloodstains and a knife believed to be the murder weapon. is he being held without bond and will appear in court next month. a delta airlines flight attendant stops a man from attempting to hijack the plane. the passengers on board the national bound flight from los angeles captured the takedown. the flight attendant using zip ties to restrain the man. passengers helped drag him to the back of the plane. pilots diverted the course of the plane landing in albuquerque new mexico. attend the graduation of the daughter of one of their slain colleagues. jocelyn's daughter shot and killed days before the ceremony. l.a. county fire chief saying her father couldn't be here so we are here. she paid her own respects to her
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father as well wearing his firefighter jacket over her graduation robe to accept her diploma. lawrence: beautiful story. carley: that is so beautiful and she is loved. that's amazing. north face called out after refusing to make jackets for an oil and gas company. >> so north face is not only an extraordinary customer of the oil and gas industry they are also a pat partner with the oil and gas company. carley: talk with the man behind the ad campaign exposing the company's hypocrisy ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ [screaming] >> they're drowning. they're drowning. they're drowning. carley: fox news capturing devastating video along the southern border showing migrants nearly drowning as they cross the rio grande river. this just after a little boy is abandoned by smugglers near the el paso, texas border. that happened in the same area these two young sisters were dropped over the wall. acting deputy chief patrol agent of the el paso sector walter joins us now with the latest. good morning to you. these situations are obviously devastating. how often do you see children in desperate situations? >> well, good morning, i would like to say that it wasn't something that we see off but we often see this tactic used by if
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transnational criminal organizations along the border. i can tell you that we have seen 327% increase since this time last year of unaccompanied children. coming to the border area. and for this el paso sector, almost 14,000 fiscal year-to-date unaccompanied children here at the border. carley: what do these kids tell you? are they scared? do most of them have parents that they're trying to get to in the u.s.? >> well, it depends. each situation is different. but what i have seen is they are frightened and terrified. i heard that video. i could hear in that child's voice the terror and just, you know, the raw emotion in that child's voice. and it's heart-breaking that he has to live through that until our agents can arrive. lawrence: yeah, absolutely. i believe he was holding a teddy bear, too. which is another heart breaking detail. do you think that these children are being used as a diversion.
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we have heard that smugglers could bring a group of kids or one child to an area because they know that you and your co-workers will go over and help the child and then they will smuggle in drugs across the border in another area. >> it's absolutely a diversion. the same tcos that bring these children and place them there are the same ones that smuggle drugs, contraband, cash, weapons on both sides of the border area. they are definitely trying to divert our assets so that the border environment there is better for them. carley: this problem is one that is only getting worse. over the past four months the number of illegal immigrants crossing into our country has gone up. how much can border patrol take? what are your biggest complaints about the situation on the ground right now? >> well, we're constantly maintaining border security and managing the migrant influx that we have. it's a constant give and take
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of, you know, the agents we have available that are maintaining border security knowing who and what comes across the border. and then the agents that are diverted for processing humanitarian care. so we're working strong to secure the border. that's our number one priority here. national security. and to do so, we have to know who and what is coming across the border. carley: absolutely. you are doing tough work i'm sure on not a lot of sleep. thank you for waking up early to relay your message as well. we appreciate it. >> thank you. carley: all right. mothers of victims are calling out black lives matter for profiting from their grief as a blm chapter leaders walks away from the organization. the major criticism that organization is now facing coming up next. ♪
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will: we're back with quick headlines, fisher-price recalls four baby products after four deaths. the consumer products safety commission the 4 in 1 rock and glide is a suffocation risk and parents should not using it immediately. four babies died after being placed in the soother unrestrained and rolling over on their stomach. the 2 and 1 sooth and play glider also recalled but not linked to any deaths. walmart will close its stores on thanksgiving day for the second day in a row. the retailer says it's a thank you to employee was for all their hard work and dedication during the pandemic. stores will reopen on black friday. lawrence, over to you. lawrence: thank you, will. this week on "fox & friends," mothers of police shooting victims called out black lives matter for profiting from their grief and a former chapter leader said the group's priorities are totally misplaced.
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>> these people feel like our children are being slaughtered on the streets and they can put a #up' and say their name or put a picture up benefit but don't want to help. >> they should have dealt with the advocacy, the healing, the love of those mothers first before anything occurred other than rioting in the street. >> i always ask folks how can black lives matter matter if black minds don't matter? >> blm has been co-opted. they have been co-opted by teachers unions. lawrence: bob woodson the founder of the woodson gives a voice to black motors united. bob, thank you so much for joining the program. i want to pick up where rashad left. he has been quite critical of the grown. he helped found one of the local chapters. he says their message is
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essentially black seeped in our household. that's different from black lives matter little b not teaching the values we teach in our home. >> in fact, they are just the opposite. they are really getting paid to solve a problem that they helped create. they are like a parasite on the rich legacy of the civil rights movement and using it for political purposes but also what they are doing is they are promoting values that were essential for blacks to survive slavery and racism. self-determination the centrallality of the family. they separate work from income. they separate rights from responsibility. they make victimization is a new drug of choice in black america. and it is self--they are attacking the police and as a consequence the murder rate in
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those communities continues to skyrocket at a time when black mothers are demanding that the police be reenergized and supported. lawrence: bob, the conversation was supposed to be equal justice under the law. when did you notice that there was a turn in that conversation? >> from the very beginning, right after minnesota george floyd when they talked about their championing the cause of black justice. but immediately they migrated from there to attacking the nuclear family as being euro centric and, therefore, racist. then they went to rioting in portland, oregon where they burned the american flag, and also desecrated the cross saying that's a christian cross is a symbol of white supremacy. they quickly migrated from social justice for blacks and turned to their real agenda and that is denigrating the values and virtues of this nation.
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again, using the black communities and the cause, legitimate concerns that people may have. 94% of blacks are killed by other blacks. yet, they convey the notion that this is just the reverse. they are vilifying the police. police are withdrawing from these communities as a consequence murder rates are going up. this rip off has to stop. lawrence: it does have to stop. i go to these communities. many of them like a community i grew up with, where these parents are grieving. they want help. but there's absolutely no media coverage at all. why is that? >> and that's because the media is complicit. so are the civil rights leaders and so are the members of the blackhawk caucus. they are complicit in their silence in not protecting
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black -- black lives matter has spawned a whole race grievance industry. that's why. you get millions of dollars, people conducting racial audits. the fact is that coca-cola and other companies are prospering upper income blacks. any time you generalize about a group of people and try to apply remedies, the benefit always goes to those at the top. so middle class blacks who are lawyers and well-trained will profit from the outpouring of support while low income moms in these communities will suffer. lawrence: it's not, right, bob. we have to be consistent on the issue. when the state abuses the power we have to investigate that and hold them accountable. when people kill each other. we have to hold them accountable. when people target cops unfairly we have to hold them accountable. it has to be equal across the
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carley: another scandal for hunter biden this time for his correction to the burisma linked lobbying firm blue star strategies. will: former ukrainian told officials that blue star offered him access to officials high up in hillary clinton's 2016 presidential campaign. this is just weeks before the election. lawrence: here to react is fox news contributor and former house oversight committee chairman jason chaffetz. okay, from what we know, jason, he was addicted to drugs at the time which is tragic. a lot of americans go through that so how was he still having all these business dealings and what did he offer these companies? >> well, this is the suspicion, right? this is the concern. is that 2014, hunter biden joined the burisma board.
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shortly thereafter blue star strategies becomes involved. the vice president hunter biden's dad becomes in charge of ukrainian process. goes over to ukraine and famously goes out and brags about how he is going to withhold nearly a billion dollars in u.s. taxpayer dollars if they don't swish out who their prosecutor is. meanwhile now new emails are showing that this blue star strategies is out there bragging that they can provide access to the highest levels of hillary clinton's campaign, including the potential new chief of staff. the ambassador, yovanovitch is saying in testimony before congress i don't know that hunter biden was involved. meanwhile george kent who works for the state department was warning the biden white house and the vice president's office and others within the state department that hey, this hunter biden thing looks really suspicious. will yovanovitch has a meeting in december of 2016 but
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supposedly nothing was awry. are you kidding me? this is why the u.s. attorney is involved and why there is more smoke than ever that hunter biden did something nefarious and that his dad, the current president of the united states, has a lot of explaining to do. carley: jason, let's talk about the may jobs number missed the mark by about hundred thousand jobs. adviser said covid-19 is still relatively permanent in may as much of the population remains unvaccinated and many states were just beginning to adjust their public health guidance. these factors interact with unemployment insurance which can allow workers to take longer to re-think their careers, try to find jobs in new industries and negotiate for higher wages but can also slow unemployment thowth and prolong long-term ast part is the key. what's your reaction? >> yeah. i think government is competing with the private sector. i don't care where you where did you go in this country, you are
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having problems finding businesses that can actually employ people. one missing part of this story that i want people to understand, go back 10 years under the obama white house. the federal budget was about $3.7 trillion. it now is proposed by joe biden to be $6 trillion. 50% increase in our federal budget in over 10 years. the debt has swelled from roughly 16 trillion to nearly 30 trillion. nearly doubling. there is a huge massive effect. is your government that much more effective and efficient with a 50% increase? no. it's more bureaucrats. more government. more regulators. and the consequence our economy is suffering and we are not growing like we should be. will: jason, i want to see what you think about a story that caught my attention. there is a lot of speculation about president trump and his intentions in 2024. on wayne allyn ruth's radio program, 2022 was brought up. what they talked about was
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whether or not president trump should run for coming from florida, become a united states congressman in 2022. then become speaker of the house where ruth said then you could lead in the investigation into biden or anything else before 2024 even comes up. trump said huh, that's interesting. what's your reaction? >> yeah. i tweeted about this a few months ago. under the constitution you don't need to be a member of congress to be elected the speaker of the house. so, put donald trump in as speaker of the house, can he go out and investigate then he could imbeach everybody. that would be pretty fascinating. [laughter] will: yeah, i don't know that that's what he will choose to do but he seemed interested for a moment there on that radio show. we will see. >> makes for great tv i will tell you that. lawrence: donald trump launching impeachment probe on joe biden. headlines themselves. will: combination thereof before you even get to 2024.
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lawrence: thanks, jason. carley: jason, thank you so much. >> thanks, guys. carley: turning to headlines, two detectives are killed in a wrong way crash. detectives ryan park and jamie huntley park were husband and wife. they were on the freeway when a wrong way driver slammed into their car. that driver was also killed. police are still investigating if drugs or alcohol played a role. the two detectives are remembered as the loved and decorated public servants. the cdc director issues a warning as covid hospitalizations spike among teenagers. the agency reporting hospitalizations for kids age 12 to 17, more than doubled from march to april. of those hospitalized, rougherly a third were put in the icu and 5% needed ventilators. dr. rochelle wolenski says she is deeply concerned by the trend and warned teens to keep wearing masks around those that are not vaccinated.
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a 19-year-old is adopted by former case worker in florida. wow, here is that moment it became official. watch. [applause] carley: look at that monday yea was in foster care. she waited 6 years to age out of the system before being adopted by leah it. leah says she wanted monday yea to know she would always be by her side. and if you don't love that story. what's there to love. that is beautiful. lawrence: the soul of america. have you got to love it. lawrence: turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth who has the weather forecast. rick? rick: i love those stories before i come on. that was the best story of the day. thank you, producers for the way you just stacked that little run down for us. here you go.
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here are your temps as you are waking up this morning. 78 degrees in minneapolis and minneapolis, you are, what, at about 6:40 in the morning there incredibly warm. a really hot day in store for us, again today across parts of -- in fact this week coming week is going to be, again, very, very warm. a lot of moisture down across parts of the southern plains. take a look at this. really heavy rain going on right now across areas of louisiana and in across parts of mississippi. this doesn't really change for the next number of days. we will get a couple breaks out of this here. overall our pattern stays incredibly wet and in fact parts of east texas this coming week. some sports probably pushing around 10 inches of rain. here you go, take look at high temperatures today. 101 for a high in foorg. 88 in orlando. 77 in little rock. so, a lot of disparities. things that don't look very typical right now on the map. that's what we have got going on. incredible drought going on across the plains. not a good story for farmers in
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north dakota. guys, back to you. will: not a drought down in texas. not a drought down there. tons of rain. thanks, rick. coming up, amazon is facing backlash requiring employ grease share their vaccination status in order to forego mask. radio host jason rantz calls it shot shaming for unvaccinated employees. he's next. ♪ ♪ always something it there to remind me ♪ ♪ cell phone repair. did you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? just get a quote at libertymutual.com. really? i'll check that out. oh yeah. i think i might get a quote. not again! aah, come on rice. do your thing. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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joins us now. so, jason, i remember talking about this just a week or so ago when i was hosting "fox news primetime." it's a brand. it's a vaccine passport. it's a sticker. it's segregation of vaccinated and unvaccinated employees, you know what, jason, it's really getting more common. >> it is. and i kind of call it a reverse scarlet letter because there is a lot of pressure to get this vaccine and i certainly understand the pressure to do it. i think people who want the vaccine should get the vaccine' in consultation with their doctor. that's what i did. however, what i don't like is this pressure to do something that maybe someone is not yet ready to do or simply doesn't want to do or, more importantly, doesn't need. i'm not going to pretend that someone who recently had a covid infection who has the antibodies in their system should be rushing to go out and get the vaccine. i'm not going to pretend that someone who is healthy, who is a teenager who might have some questions about some of these connections potentially to heart
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inflammation shouldn't step back and just like do some examination. but, instead, we are getting all of this pressure to get the vaccine and what ends up happening in a situation like amazon, if you don't have that sticker on, you are going to get ostracized. you are going to get pressured by folks wondering why it is you didn't get the vaccine maybe you did get the vaccine but you don't want to tell people because it's a private medical decision. it's not so much that it's this particular vaccine or this particular issue. it's the larger issue of saying you don't get to tell me that i have to be public about medical decisions that i am making. will: you know, i like how you categorize the people who might not want to get the vaccine. there could be someone who has already had covid. has antibodies or teen worried about the complications. there are people with medical condition who it doesn't make sense for them as well. now they have to live in segregated world. worse than that, they have to essentially then share their health information based upon this outward show of whether or not you are vaccinated.
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and here is what -- here is what is weird. you brought this up. doesn't the vaccine protect me from you anyway? why do we have to show each other? why do we have to require? why do you have to have this push? if i have the vaccine, me, i'm all good. why this corporate push? >> yeah. it's a constant push of mixed messaging. it either works or it doesn't. i believe that it works. so, the fact of the matter is, we have every single american in this country who wants one has access to a vaccine. i trust that the people who want one will go ahead and get one. i trust that the people who aren't getting one, who want added protection will do what they can to mitigate their own risks. we are adults. we have personal responsibility. i expect that people will utilize that. what i'm most concerned with, not just the segregation but the mandate. amazon may not be mandating this even though peer pressure might have the same effect. we have for example, in washington state, public universities mandating, not just
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students, but also staff members now get the vaccine in order to work on campus. that is a government agency. that's a government telling people they have to get a vaccine. where does it stop? why too we think that it is just going to stop here. i don't think it's alarmist to point this out. god forbid if you say anything you immediately get called anti-vaxer. how many times i have been called anti-vaxer. i have gotten the vaccine. i'm not anti-vaxer. i'm simply raising the point. will: i would say it has gone it. we descron the story on "fox & friends" a hospital in houston says don't get the vaccine, you lose your job. i have friends i have spoken to at their various jobs saying if i don't get the vaccine they are telling me i can't come n person or switch positions. amazon is just the high profile for example. jason, thanks for being on with us this morning. >> thanks, will. appreciate it. will: faceoff, new campaign aims to expose the controversy of a
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popular clothing brand. it refuses to make merchandise for an oil and gas company. the man behind this effort joins us live next. ♪ ♪ more protection, more sun, more joy. neutrogena® beach defense® the suncare brand used most by dermatologists and their families, neutrogena® for people with skin. my nunormal? fewer asthma attacks with nucala. a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala reduces eosinophils, a key cause of severe asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
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but kids also need computers. and sometimes the hardest thing about homework is finding a place to do it. so why not hook community centers up with wifi? for kids like us, and all the amazing things we're gonna learn. over the next 10 years, comcast is committing $1 billion to reach 50 million low-income americans with the tools and resources they need to be ready for anything. i hope you're ready. 'cause we are. lawrence y'all got to hear this an ad campaign from an oil and gas industry targeting north face over the crazy policies regarding fossil fuel. will: look here on your screen that billboard is seen near north face's denver office putting duplicity in the spotlight. carley: next guest spearheading that thank you north face
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campaign. ceo chris wright joins us now. good morning to you. >> good morning to you, glad to be here. carley: we are glad to have you. okay. so we have a clip of one of the ads that you created called thank you, north face. we will play it now. we will play it now and have you explain it on the back end. take a listen. >> globally, 60% of all clothing fibers are made out of oil and gas. for north face it likely 90% or more. so north face is not only an extraordinary customer of the oil and gas industry they are also a partner with the oil and gas industry. carley: okay; so there is a really interesting story as to why you felt the need to target north face in this way. tell us why you cut these ads. >> well, two years ago my wife and i have climbers and our company is outdoors people. we actually ordered jackets about 2,000 north face jackets for everyone in our condition and north face logo on it and a liberty logo on it, fabulous. two years later another company
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in our industry ordered north face jackets and they say no, are we don't want to associate with your industry and they won't co-brand with a company in the oil and gas industry. that's nuts. will: tell us, put a little bit of a flesh on the bones of that ad we just saw. so you are pointing out the hypocrisy that if i go buy a north face puffer jacket or anything else, how is it made from oil and gas? >> yeah, so the nylon, the outer layer of the jacket made out of oil and gas. the stuffing inside that gives it the puffer, that's made out of oil and gas. meaning it's petra chemical. nylon, lycra. policy esther are all made literally the material is oil and gas. of course they're made in manufacturing plants using oil and gas to power the factories. they are felony over from china or boated over from china using oil and gas. they are in stores lighted by natural gas electricity.
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so, and the other thing to me is all outdoor activity which i love the ability to fly across the country to climb a mountain or go snowboarding or kayaking all that needs oil and gas. lawrence: obviously hypocrisy there and frustrating because we keep seeing companies across america. but what makes you take the extra step to create a whole ad campaign to target them? >> because, lawrence, there is just this crazy inability to have a real on the united states today where energy comes from. what we want to do is force that dialogue. here's the funny twist to the story. so we had to call five billboard companies to run this billboard. the majority, in fact all but one that we found would not run a billboard that says that here is what it is made out of. thank you. that's controversial.
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between two texans. lawrence:they knew what they were doing. carley: i am okay with that. lawrence jones woke up at 3:30 in the morning and made breakfast. i have never in the history of my life made breakfast before an early morning shift. lawrence: the new diet, i need some fuel before the show. will: it is impressive. carley: you were saying -- turkey sausage. lawrence: two eggs. carley: oatmeal. how long does that take? lawrence: about 10 minutes. carley: that is 20 minutes for sure. will: the first year being 3 or four. before we join you this morning we have a live look in washington, fox news obtained emails revealing intense infighting between state department officials.
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carley: the probe into the covid lab leak theory. lawrence: they investigate covid's origins. >> reporter: doctor fauci was cooking with the skillet and under fire from his critics. >> scientifically speaking, to understand the origins of the virus. >> you should want to know how this happened so that we can make sure it doesn't happen again but in the middle of that i become the object of extraordinary, i believe completely inappropriate, distorted, misleading and misrepresented attacks. >> reporter: emails show intense bureaucratic infighting an investigation into the under secretary for arms control, the situation has become, quote, embarrassing. mike pompeo fighting a battle not just with the chinese but
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the us government as well. >> we overcame lots of internal bureaucracy to get there. they were trying to suppress the state department as well. >> josh howley says anthony fauci's recently released emails about covid 19 origins, the time has come for fauci to resign. the origins of covid 19 into any and all efforts. the viruslike reforms in nature, is open to the lab leak theory. the belmont stakes, you can take carly and lawrence too. carley: it is a great idea. >> a guy who has a big debut tonight unfiltered, a bunch of big debuts from noon to 3. carley: well-deserved. will: saturday night's, dan
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bonngino starts tonight and that is exciting. >> you don't want to miss this. we come out of the gate with what can we do to fix this. i was inspired in this monologue because i was eating breakfast a couple weeks ago and a woman came up to me and said what can we do? i feel like the country has fallen apart and i got to tell you i did not have the best answer for him. i addressed voting and we should do that but that is not enough in tonight you will like what i have to say. you will see the moments, we don't want to miss it. >> you are hitting on something important. our jobs cannot simply be to deck out the flaws in other people thinking, we have to offer a positive vision of how to fix this country so i am
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excited what your answer is. >> debate with an obama administration official you are not going to want to miss. >> you did not know that. >> can't let that go. i am that are really -- when i put my tie on, every minute counts. >> we've got to get your opinion. a federal investigator you investigate things for a living so how do we get to the bottom of the origins of covid 19? calls are growing for the former commission to get to the bottom of this. what do you think? >> my podcast went nuclear. let me walk you through some quick. february of 2020 i will tell you the author in a second the paper is written which says this looks like that origin, february of
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2020, that paper we think is the paper cited by anthony fauci april 17th, 2020, at a press conference where he said he waves off, doesn't have the waves off the lab leak and says read this paper, looks like bat origin. april 18th fauci gets an email thanking him, thanks for saying that, you really helped us out. who send that email? the author of the paper and here's what is fascinating. superfine print i use for my radio show but there's a redaction in the email that sites the foia laws, uncut -- law enforcement investigation to be precise with someone investigating a cover-up or an
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attempt to cover up the origins of this virus? i can give you the facts the redaction is there. 6 days after the fauci press conference waving off the lab leak the trump administration pools funding for eco-health alliance and the media lost their minds over it. the trump administration those something and why was doctor fauci less than candid? he's a public figure. no animus against doctor fauci, i never met him but his victim card is on becoming. he's not a private doctor. the decisions he made affected billions of lives around the world, he's open to scrutiny. what is with that? on the rachel maddow show. lawrence: he is not even practicing.
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he's not okay with the criticism. >> that is an excellent point, on the cover of vanity fair. not doing a canal but in international medical figure. something happened with the cover-up and there's an investigation. taxpayers darn well-deserved to know. carley: alexandria ocasio cortez was talking at a prime prevention press conference and she had one theory how to reduce violent crime. listen to what she had to say. >> a lot of theories how we prevent violence but what we have right here is an evidence-based approach blaming bail reform is not evidence-based. it is not acceptable to use jail
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as garbage disposal, garbage bins for human being. if we want to reduce violent crime or the number of people in our jails the answer is to stop building more of them but to build more hospitals, we pay organizers and get people mental health care, employment etc.. it is a support community. >> she tweeted about literally abolishing the prism system, she says it is racist, ties to jim crow and slavery. she wants to put money that would go to the prison system to mental health services. what would happen if that were to take place? >> that soundbite there really is epidemic of this liberal ignorance, this vacuum of knowledge they live in. it is the single dumbest idea i have ever heard in my life.
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it speaks to her lack of real world experience. liberalism is a forest fire, burns down everything it touches and because the ideas are stupid, here's the problem. it is hard medicine for some to take but these ideas get people heard and people killed. i went through new york city as a police officer under the rudy giuliani era where they abandoned the failed policing public safety policies and finally said we will do this crazy thing like enforce the law and figured something out, when they started arresting people for jumping the turnstile the guy or woman who jumped the turnstile is the same person who beat the crap out of someone. it didn't happen.
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at the time it was thought of as revolutionary, the fact that aoc is proposing the opposite, decriminalizing things and stopping the production of building a jail but is going to get people killed. this is not saying and i'm sorry people listen to her. >> i will reduce the number of criminals by reducing the number of jails. it is pretty ingenious magic thinking if you think about it. if we have fewer laws there are fewer laws to break and fewer lawbreakers. forget there will be more murders, there will be sure criminals because we have your criminal laws. the police department, just shove them aside. >> you brought up a good point. i have an idea, let's build less
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computers so police departments can stop tracking crime and crime will go away, go after apple, ibm, microsoft. i have a computer right here. if we stop building computers there will be no crime stats report. forget their logic. lawrence: you've got to save some for people tonight, at 10:00 pm eastern. he is a host now. >> a lot of responsibility. i promise the show will be in for a go. they let me do this at 10:00 which is amazing, they are like give him a show, see what happens, let's see what happens together. the 5 some headline starting
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with a fox news alert. and unlawful assembly declared in minneapolis as protests range for a second night over deadly police shooting, and the rest as protesters has fires, vandalized buildings, winston smith junior was shot and killed by us marshals earlier this week. he was a felon wanted for illegally owning a gun. police say smith was shot after he fired a gun. this just in, g7 nations have agreed to a 15% minimum tax hike for local companies, big tech could see a big bump in taxes, it aims to get companies to pay profits made in different companies even if they don't physically operate. the new rules would mean senate approval goes into effect. dollywhat is building a new resort named after this song.
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♪♪ ♪♪ the sweetest music i have ever known. >> heartthrob was released in 1994 and is building the heart song lodge and resort. this is what it will look like. being built down the road, set to open in 2023. those are your headlines. >> we been to dollywood? lawrence: know. will: i have been to pigeon fork. coming up class is in session. robert mueller will teach law students about finding the russia probe, giving special counsel a failing grade. that is next. ♪♪
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>> we might be short on details during the russia probe but special counsel robert mueller is finally going to open up about his controversial investigation to the university of virginia school of law who have a new class called the mueller report in the role of special counsel. mueller will serve as the teacher for one session, the us attorney for utah, brett tolman. the investigation itself came up with nothing, no collusion. a special course at the university of virginia. >> struck me as almost comical. we will see robert mueller who i worked with and have a lot of respect for him prior to this investigation and the debacle that was but i don't know. the title of the course is how
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we waste a lot of taxpayer money and didn't come up with anything maybe that is a course worth listening to buy have a feeling that is not what he's talking about. will: what do you think he will talk about? >> similar to what he did after attorney general william barr presented the findings, indicated there was no collusion he complains, had discussion and went to the media and argued they did find things that were important that weren't actionable. it will be a bit of a show for him. probably some class that he engages in and those that served with him who were very partisan and served to make this country further divided. will: i would be surprised if it's not inflammatory, no standard to live up to, no standard for conviction.
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essentially no standard, unless there is some brave student to hold what he says accountable. at this point he can say whatever he wants. >> the equivalent of vice president harris doing a class on how i served the border crisis. as long as they talk about what they think they accomplished there is no one there to check what they are saying. you are talking about lawsuits, they serve in the government and have an impression of a chapter in history. will: what does it say about the university of virginia? >> shows how detached our universities have become, they don't want to learn lesson from failures. instead they want to change the narrative, that is at all levels of university life. >> thank you for your perspective. i will be curious to see who signed up for this.
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of changing conditions. get those bets in, the triple crown is hours away. the 150 third belmont stakes set to take place in front of a limited crowd of 11,000 people. kentucky derby winner medina spirit will not take part in the race after failing a drug test last month. that was big news. baffert slammed with a 2-year suspension. >> we talked in the last couple weeks and months about the necessity of private citizens to step up, this is a cultural take over. school systems, corporate america, pop culture, academia, as best embodied by critical race. showing up in school districts across the country. in carmel, new york, tatyana abraham stood up at a school board meeting and gave a piece of her mind.
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>> stop indoctrinating our children. you are teaching my children and other children if they believe in god almighty they are part of a cold. why can't we let the public know you are teaching children to murder our police officers. do you want the proof? i have the proof. is that what scares you? the proof that apparent standing up against all of you? you work for me. i don't work for you. this is still america. as long as i am standing here on this good brown earth of god i will fight and i -- this is not the last of me you will see. todd: the one who said i will walk out. carley: i did hear that. lawrence: that mom is furious, reached out and talked about this critical race theory and we talked about this.
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parents can fight back against this. the problem is when they fight they decide to hide this part of the curriculum. it's not going anywhere but you have to arm your kids with the truth, tell them the good, the bad and the ugly so they went into classrooms they have the truth to combat what is happening. it has been in our culture for a long time. they've taken control of college campuses. the same with secondary education. carley: i love what she said about you work for me. i don't work for you and that is right. remember in texas there was a big election and all the candidates that were against critical race theory won by a wide margin. you bring a good point about how it can be hidden but there is a strong movement in this country against critical race theory. it was not on radar until two years ago. it was called diversity training
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and donald trump tried to get rid of it on a federal level and was called a racist because of that. >> it comes wrapped in a trojan horse of pretty wrapping paper called diversity, equity and inclusion. in school districts, cultural competency training will come -- the same poisonous ideas, parents have to be vigilant for what your children are being taught. lawrence: education education education. smugglers turning themselves into border patrol to start the journey all over again. lara logan takes advantage of the system. she joins us next. i'm so glad you're ok, sgt. houston. this is sam with usaa. do you see the tow truck? yes, thank you, that was fast. sgt. houston never expected this to happen. or that her grandpa's dog tags would be left behind.
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>> smugglers exploding the broken immigration system. >> side effects 16 hour plot to the us. every ride back to the border by turning himself in to border patrol and he did is not once but 6 times in a month. >> where logan joins us now. making fun of us on tick-tock, and a new report to see you. >> more importantly, they exploit loopholes that put in
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place by the administration, people moan a lot about the strategy or not doing anything about it and they are, they created a policy that opened the border and that opens the border for innocent women and children wanting a better life. it opens the border to unaccompanied minors and opens the border for cartels. they are the most violent, organizations on the face of the earth. and stripping all us agents. they shutdown law enforcement. they enacted policies.
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and building facilities, denied the press access, they are happening at the same time, and to enable it to facilitate that and conceal it. the idea they are not doing anything about it is awesome quite frankly. >> this all comes down to two things and you touched on it. and safety for americans but the cost. millions of dollars per week, family units and just talking about this, use our system to hitch a ride. how do you begin to tell them how much exactly a kostis.
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>> it is a very good point. in terms of money, when they pay him, they have billions and billions of dollars out of it, so much money that when it was something, let the smugglers handle it. they run the smuggling operations was one cartel said they are making more money out of human smuggling than they are -- humans are the gift that keeps on giving, it is the largest form of modern slavery and the cartel told me this is our workforce, using these people to work for us and some do normal jobs and some will do the same that nobody wants to think about. they don't have a choice.
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and under the control, and and talk about the money. it is costing millions and millions of dollars. the administration is hiding it but they are being deceitful. but the human cost is the one that is unconscionable. the great state of texas where i live and i'm proud to live is number one in the country or sex trafficking or child trafficking, don't know why we use this word trafficking. talking about euphemisms, diversity wrapped up as, and it is raised, that is not something to be proud of and i don't know why.
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it is inevitable, so many children being trafficked. and social justice, and you're exaggerating, that's not everybody that is a right-wing talking point or you must be a white supremacist. and and and not acceptable, not one child. someone is coming from. summit is going to say this isn't good enough and we are not going to live with it and it is not enough for us because it can be stopped. this isn't some intractable
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foreign war, it is right on our doorstep. and and the bureaucrats wanted this to happen. the real question is why. tell us why. will: you are speaking to two texans on this as well and they are saying. you weren't born there. >> it was once. still have that mindset. turning to your headlines. adopted to the pond to pull his way out, disappeared under the water.
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and and he died a hero. he was a 5 year veteran of the worchester police department and he was survived by his wife and two children. what a terrible story. and refuses to make merchandise. they did not want his name is affiliated with fossil fuels. and they are made from oil and gas, joined us earlier on "fox and friends". it is this crazy inability to have a real dialogue in the united states today, that is where energy comes from.
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and they are number one in angry drivers, bad tips and cursing to customer service agents. massachusetts came number 2 followed by virginia, virginia came in fourth and fifth. >> anybody surprised? >> i'm not surprised at all. >> after rick does the weather i will get to that. >> the fox news weather. >> rhode island is the smallest
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state. looking at the weather map, a lot of oyster across the south, flooding concerns the ground is saturated. east texas, louisiana to arkansas, and the next number of days, and at times but heavy downpours and look at that, parts of northeast texas and other spots probably in next this of 8 to 10 inches of rain. in the far northern plains, and a long-term, into the 100 degree range. in minnesota as well. not good news for folks across
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from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. >> restaurants around the
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country struggled, to increase entry-level, they are employing artificial intelligence, to keep costs down and replace entry-level workers. restaurant's ceo, andy putzand in er. there testing artificial intelligence in drive-throughs. this is a trend that continues to take other entry-level jobs away. >> businesses are like any other entity. if you threaten their survival, with food costs increasing dramatically because of the biden administration policies leading to inflation generally, wages are going up. and when you incentivize people not to work they don't work,
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they are facing a crisis. coming out of the pandemic which put a lot of restaurants out of business. what mcdonald's is looking at will spread through the industry, there's a possibility. >> if artificial intelligence use that mcdonald's, what group of people does it hurt the most. we were told it would be a compassionate solution. >> that is so wrong. a study out of brookings a few years ago said if you graduate from high school, get a full-time job and wait until you are 21 years old, a 2% chance of ending up in poverty in a 75% chance of entering the middle class and the job didn't ask to be a white-collar job at a full-time job at mcdonald's or anywhere else oh when you kill these jobs and entry-level jobs. when you get on the matter of
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opportunity, people hurting young americans, they lost a year, to hurt them further is insanity. it is economic insanity. carley: what you think about 100,000 jobs short of expectation? should it be higher at this point? >> if you think about the trump administration, economic data, no matter what it was, the phrase that showed up in the press release was exceed economist expectations which is reversal from the obama era when was the economy used to make these very bright predictions where the economy was going, reality is not meeting the predictions. the economists believe this government spending actually works, government can spend its way to prosperity for we can't spend our way to prosperity, government spending will not do
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anything permanent, not helping create jobs but hurting, the policies are hurting job creation, we will see this going forward. economists will keep predicting the policies will do better than they do. >> they underperformed for several months in a row and you got to wonder why. arkansas police officers saved a baby who was choking, 3-week mac brady, they join us live coming up next. ♪♪
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lawrence: arkansas police officer save the 3 week old baby and, >> and you are okay. >> that officer, and and how this is start. how that officer hubbard saved the day? >> trying to give them with medicine. taking this on and started choking and getting it out and turning purple and quit breathing, we called 9 one one
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and and rolling up here and took care of business. >> what was this experience like for you. this is a scary situation. >> the hardest part in this job, on camera i can promise you on the inside, that is what this incident was. >> if you had any experience dealing with something like this. you seem so well composed. has this proven the situation before? >> she kind of had the same thing. they played a part in that.
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god bless. >> it needed to be highlighted. >> more "fox and friends" moments away. you mastered the master bath. you created your own style. and you - yes, you! turned a sourdough starter into a sourdough finisher. so when you learn your chronic dry eye is actually caused by reduced tear production due to inflammation you take it on, by talking to your eyecare professional about restasis®... which may help you make more of your own tears with continued use twice a day, every day. restasis® helps increase your eye's natural ability to produce tears, which may be reduced by inflammation due to chronic dry eye. restasis® did not increase tear production in patients using anti-inflammatory eye drops or tear duct plugs. to help avoid eye injury and contamination, do not touch bottle tip to your eye or other surfaces. wait 15 minutes after use before inserting contact lenses. the most common side effect is a temporary burning sensation. ask your eye care professional about restasis®.
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the third most polite state, north carolina, second, arkansas and the politest state is mississippi. [laughter] >> concerted effort. >> not cool. will: fox news podcast. >> see y'all tomorrow. jedediah: bye, guys. >> you can run but you cannot hide. we are just getting worry word from across the pond that the roughest countries in the world have agreed to a minimum tax of at least 15%. so some companies that try to relocate to low-tax available spots in the planet won't be incentivized to do so if there's a minimum tax. big deal. great to have you with
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